The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE 4 -EDITORIAL
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1936
The Fort Worth Press
a SURIPPS-HOWAED NEWSPAPER
DON K. WEAVER.............
JAMES *. POLLOCK.........
...Editor
Manager
Entered as second class mail matter at the Post-
office at Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 1. 1921, under
act of March 1, 1879.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE.........DIAL 2-5151
Mrernte own e d and published
===--daily (ex ept Munday)
uuPeees by The Fort Worth
1 1 Press Company, Fifth
aeteal = and Jones Sts., Fort
1-Worth, Texas
"sermons-nowant
s Members of Scripps-
»2 Howard Newspaper Mb
Hance The United
Preen Newspaper En-
terprise Assn., Science
Service, Newspaper In-
formation Service end
Audit Bureau of Circu-
I distribution of culture, of education, of 1
thought and of free expression.
3. "That through it we can obtain a
greater security of life for our citizens
and a more equal opportunity for them
to prosper.
4. “That through it we can best fos- |
ter commerce and the exchange of art |
and science between nations.
5. "That through it we can avoid the
rivalry of armament, avert hatred and
encourage good will and true justice.
6. “That through it we offer hope
for peace and a more abundant life to
the people of the whole world,”
. To give utterance to these tenets, the
President is voyaging 12,000 wiles. No
voyager in all history ever carried a |
more vital message..
lallon.
Thursday, Dec.: 3. 1936
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier per week 10c or 4be per month. Single
copy at newsstands and from newsboys, IF. By
mail in Texas, $6 per years $7 per year elsewhere.
. ,. This seems an age of self-abnega-
tion. An Ontario man sues himself
for $56,000, Mussolini fires three
duces, and Farley is frowning at the
postmaster f/i neral. .
“Give Light and the People
Will find Their Own Way."
The Child Labor Amendment
THE federal Child Labor Amendment, 1
I ratified bo far by 24 states, will
Johnson Says:
I A Bouquet Eor Gennerich--
And Some More Flowers
. For the Living .
By HUGH S. JOHNSON
T1TASHINGTON, Dec. 3.- Gus Gen-
nerich is dead. The President
has had his ministers and his marshals |
people who are doubtless dear to
him but no man ever had a more de-1
voted personal staff, '
and now two, of them
are gone. When you
sail the Spanish Main
you attract all kinds
of spindrift. Some of
it, helps and some of I
it does not. But of
that faithful crew.
Mr. Jonnson
there never was any 1
question. Selfless, un-
aspiring, sincere. It’s
tough luck. It would | ■
have been better to
have lost. 15 states.
More Than a Fly in This Ointment!
• Pegler
A Treatise On Hang-
overs — We Don’t
Know Just Why
FU
New D
Thu
A Sensible Solution
TT SEEMS to us the Fort Worth
1 School board performed a pretty
sensible piece of statesmanship in deal-
ing with the controversy over the use
of a public school auditorium by the
Open Forum.
Because it dealt with intangibles,
the situation was a ticklish one and
be presented again for the considera-
tion of the Texas Legislature this
winter.
Texas legislators heretofore have
refused to approve this federal pro-
posal which requires ratification of 36
states to become, a part of the con-
stitution.
The current issue of The Texas
easily could have ended in bitterness
and enmity. .
The question was, first, are the
speakers brought to Fort Worth by
the Forum too radical, and, second,
should they be permitted to speak in a
school auditorium?
Weekly, quoting the Marshall Messen-
ger, says it .is. manifestly unfair that
the state's "no" has not been taken
as final, although its “yes” would be.
We beg to point out that the same
charge might be made against pro-
posals of marriage. "No" is seldom tak-
We believe the School Board acted
wisely in deciding to permit the Forum
to use the auditorium, and we do not
believe any of the. speakers that have
been heard or will be heard here under
Forum auspices arc dangerous to any-
one.
The decision covers only the remain-
der of this year. The matter may come
up again next year.
Believing that the Open Forum is
interested in promoting interest in cul-
tural and political subjects of the day.
and not in propagandizing any subver-
sive elements, and since some of our
citizens think the Forum programs this
year lean a little too far to the left,
we suggest that the Forum bring a
couple of good ‘first-class Liberty
Leaguers so that conservatism will be
sure of representation.
Meanwhile, we hope that the pub-
licity the Forum has enjoyed because
of the dissension over its programs will
arouse more interest in its cultural and
intellectual endeavors.
en as a final answer, but "yes" is.
1 If all legislation once proposed and
turned down were not permitted to be
proposed again, we would not have
some mighty good laws..
Another objection to the Child La-
bor Amendment is that it infringes upon
state rights. It seems to us this argu-
ment also is opportunistic.
The Federal kidnap law also might
be called an invasion of state rights,
but we have, heard no objections to it
on that ground because it filled a need
the states had not met.
The states individually have Hot met
the child labor problem either, and we
think Ilie federal government has as
much right to protect children from
TN my mail there are many letters
1 asking why I was so forthright
about endorsing Harold Ickes and Hom
er Cummings as members of the cab-
inet, and why I omitted to mention
Henry Wallace. It should • be obvious
' about the endorsements.
The Department of the Interior has
.always been the greatest possibility for
graft in the government. There also '
is the big. chance, of impartial govern-,
ment aid in mines and oil resources;
Whatever else has been said about Har-
old, nobody has impugned his integrity,
his intelligence, or his initiative. That
is why this column said he is a natural
| in that job. There is such a thing as 1
. experience even in Federal service -
I and in that great task of management
of national resources, how could we ,;
beat Harold Ickes? I think it would be 1
a great error to replace him and that
it not scratching any backs because the
writer has criticized him as severely as
any..
e
-,
--.C
RUSSIA
CONQU EST5
PLANS .
-1_______________- WHAT OUR READERS BAY ....................
Some Do Not Realize That a Revolution Is Going On
——-------------------------------------------—
It the five-year-old’s borrowing
proclivities are typical of this gener-
ation, it is the one following with
which Republicans should sympa-
thize.
having their souls crushed in sweat-
shops as it has to protect them from
kidnapers. ... ..
• And why is federal leadership in
protecting the rights of children any
more improper titan federal leadership
in providing old age and unemploy-
ment insurance and setting up a social
security program?
Texas already has followed the
federal government’s leadership in set-
ting up social security laws, and we
believe the Texas Legislature should
THIS column used to have a candi-e
1 date for Secretary of Agriculture
to replace Henry Wallace, but the facts |
went sour on us. With Chester Davis 1
and M. L. Wilson at his elbow, how
could you beat Henry? I doubt if it
could be done in the whole country. He
is scholarly, informed and not dogmatic
and that’s what it takes for that job.
He has at least,this one vote..
The Attorney-General's office re-
quires realism,in the selection of judges
and U. S. attorneys for the various
districts. In his early days, Mr. Cum-
mings was circumscribed, but he is to |
be judged by his past three years. You
can't beat it. In this writer's opinion
we have no better attorney general.
Now, while we are in a kindly mood,
be consistent and ratify the
Labor Amendment also. ■
Child
Roosevelt at Buenos Aires
TIME and “events have rarely con-
1 spired to place an American presi-
Five Ti .ias prisoners escaped,
using a "pistol” made of soap. Other
of the criminal eleinc nt hire lawyers
dent upon a more conspicuous spot-or
provide him with a better sounding- -
board than they'gave to President
Roosevelt at Buenos Aires.
to soft soap their way out of jail.
as Westbrook Pegler said in giving this
column its greatest boost, “Macy's does
not advertise Gimbel's,” but it would
not be decent to pass, without com-
i ment, Donald Richberg's hanging out
his shingle as general practioner in
Washington. This,writer doesn't like
any part of him on purely personal
consideration, but it is only fair to say
that there isn’t a more adroit and re-
Editor, The Press:
TT is amusing to watch the
I Hoover-crats or Wall Street-
crate die hard. They would have
us believe that the masses were
better off under the Old Deal
than under the New Deal. I
never saw one of those 50-cent |
new dollars to give two new dol- |
lars for one old dolllar.
Contributions to this col-
umn should be brief, not
more than 250 words. Full
name and address of con-
tributors must be given.
Anonymous letters will not
be published.
William Henry tells us how few, then permitting them to sell
much worse off the farmers are —worthless stock to the people to |
under the AAA than under the develop those resources, is gone 1
Farm Boards. Mr. Henry is only to return ho more.
shedding tears for the poor To. the Jeffersonians who |
farmers, because he can eat and walked the dusty roads to Kan- |
pay his bills now. Mr. Henry, sas, let us pray that they never
why not join hands with Harper return. It’s a good riddance for '
Sibley, president of the U. S. | the Democrats.
Chamber-of Commerce, and C. Their services to democracy,
were just sabotage, like that of
the last legislators. The few
enemies of democracy who sur-
M. Chester of the National Man-
ufacturers? They backed up
the chiselers to fight the New
how the ministry always lines up
with the capitalist, not intention-
ally, of course, but because of
their inherent gullibility.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnes were |
guests in our home while in |
Denton, and we did not detect .
a thing off color. None too rad-
ical for us in Denton. In fact,
we Also, had and endorsed the—-
speech of Senator Nye, the
speaker who got Jerome Davis
in bad. Do you suppose the
divines are falling down on their
duty in this "city of schools"?
Why not congratulate the |
A.A.U.W. For once the women
have shown'courage. Give them
Conditions in the New World, many
of them of his own making, have been
steadily building up for the past three
- or four years. On top of that, the
world situation today is such as to add
enormous emphasis to the address he
travelled so far to make.
Anti-climax would have been easy.
But the President did not disappoint.
He never was more effective.
His thesis was that plain people ev-
erywhere wish to live in peace with
one another and would, if only given
a chance. But statecraft has not kept
pace with science. Science has given
man wings, and harnessed the very
ether to carry his faintest whisper
across continents and seas. . But human
relations still wobble along as precar-
iously as a 17th Century chaise.
A
Money to Burn
MERICANS as a rule haven't mon-
ey to burn but, according to the
resourceful legal counselor in the
' - country. - •
Deal, but now are joining hands vived the last election had bet-
with the New Deal. Let us hope " ter. take notice of the progress
they are sincere and not of the j of evolution and refuse the first
type that say, if you cannot beat . free lunch, which is the first
your enemy, make friends of j stage of a bribe.
him. win his confidence then TSSOHIIL
him 2. LESOEUE-
Bethini. ... , Rt 3, Box 88' City.
The nation has too long elect- _
ed to office men who betrayed BARNES FDIIORIAI -
the confidence of the people to - B.TaL
serve a favored few. Their sen- FLEASES Kr.ADr.K
sibilities are so blunt that they , Editor, The Press: .
cannot understand the meaning I ET me congratulate you on |
of revolution, other than being
prodded in the back with a pitch-
fork. They arc so blunt that
they cannot understand that the
Roosevelt.-landslide is a revolu-
a cheer.
MRS. JACK JOHNSON,
1010 W. Hickory St.,
Denton, Texas.
Today’s Poem
OVERTIME
TT is high time, the President warned.
1 that this should be changed. "If the
genius of mankind that has invented
the weapons of death cannot discover
the means of preserving peace,” he
said, “civilization as we know it lives
in an evil day.”
So it is up to the nations of the
New World to point the way. First,
they can do it by maintaining peace
among themselves. Second, they must
strive to prevent the creation of those
conditions which give rise to war. They
must uphold democracy. They must,
give citizens political and religious
freedom, opportunityto work, the.
means to maintain children in healthful
surroundings and to educate them.
They must lift living standards. We
must free our commerce because com-
merce is essential to peace. They
must demonstrate to their brethren
overseas the folly of the thought that
the price of war may be less than the
price of peace.
“Democracy,” he said, “is still the
hope of the world.” And if we can con-
U. B. treasury, you'd never think it.
Every year, about this time, wails
of woe come flouting from throughout
the United States. The burden of most
* of these laments is that Mother or
Father had cached money in a stove,
furnace, or hearth, and absentminded-
ly had started a fire. And could Mr.
Uncle Sam please redeem their charred
savings?
Just the other day . in Ottumwa, la,
a waitress lighted a fire in a stove, to
heat some food, and cremated $1200
which the tavern owner had saved to
purchase an automobile.
While treasury officials have been
able to salvage a lot from the aslics,
they probably wish citizens would use
a little more forethought in their
method of saving for a rainy day
TAVING laid the ground in this |
1J beatific prelude, may we say a |
word or two about the official’s penalty |
in the Army and Navy game with the
ball on Army's 2 1-2-yard line. As.
tinue its successful application in this
hemisphere, it will spread.”
Today Out-of-Doors |
one who attempted and failed to make
the Army team when there were only
20 in the squad, and less than 400 in
the corps and who has seen all but
three games since the series was re-
sumed in 1899 and who by native
clannishness and environment is less
fairly qualified to speak about it than
anybody in the United States, may this
writer say a word?
I sat on the Navy side just above
that play. All the papers called poor
little Sullivan "the goal" for giving
Navy a touchdown by interference.
Who asked Sullivan? Who asked An-
trim’ Where are the pictures of that
play? Many, old army mates thought,
and frequently said, that Navy was
j entitled to the game, or at least a tie,
I because Army didn’t have a scoring
punch. But both Army and Navy
By MARY DAGGETT LAKE
Director, Garden 'Center. .
NTEXT to the oaks, perhaps the su--
IN macs afford the most gorgeous
coloring of all the trees and shrubs in
the fall. One variety, commonly known
, to sheep and goat herders as Kinnikin-
nik, or Tobacco Sumac, oHerH un-
usual shades of brown mid red in its
leaves in the fall. The Indians mixed
the leaves of this shrub with their
tobacco to give the smoke a par-
ticularly pleasing flavor, it is said.
The clumps of crimson berries are
| covered with a sticky secretion that,
when fresh, makes them look as if they
* were frosted. The Poison Ivy, so
called, belongs to the same family,
and there are several other sumacs
| that thrive in our locality. The three-
leaved Rhus, also called Skunk Bush
* rooters in my vicinity voiced a prayer
that I have heard frequently iii the
past three years: "When are these of-
ficials going to stop playing this game
of football?" •
You don’t hear that wail in profes-
sional games. Of course, it is true, as
Andy Kerr is reported to have said,
that you can’t dispense with the pen-
alty for pass interference unless you
want, to encourage murder. But there
is such a thing as tact and judgment,
even in a football official. When
j Home little sir, who never in his life
1 accomplished a deed of derringdo in
the blood and sawdust of the arena,
struts his "little hour or two" to blast
a kid like Sullivan, this writer, for one,
would like to have a moment alone
with him.
and Sguaw Bush, was used by the
: Indians the root bark made the red-
AND so he laid down what might
A well be called Pan-America's six
articles of faith. "Let us affirm,” he
said:
1. "That we maintain and defend the
democratic form of constitutional rep-
resentative government.
2. “That through such ‘government
we can more greatly provide a. wider
brown strands of their baskets and the
■ peeled twigs, their arrow shafts: -
The Evergreen Sumac, or Kinnikin-
nik, is now to be found in nursery
catalogues, and it is no wonder, for
the brilliant fruits and gay foliage of
the autumn season would recommend
By WESTBROOK PEGLER
I TANGOVER is a malady in two
11 phases, cerebral and gastric,
but the gastric phase in only sec-
ondary, and in some cases does
not occur at all Cerebral hang-
over, which is known also as the
jitters and the shrieking meemies,
comes from the absorption of al-
cohol into the tissues of the brain.
This does something to the centers
governing the emotions, and the
attack continues until the alcohol
has vanished. • - .
A There is no
medicine or
treatment to
cure or miti-
gate hangover,
although sef-
ence has made
faithful efforts
to discover
such a boon,
an d nt any
fiends in hu-
man form have
marketed va-
rious kinds of
fizzing salts
■ and wafers for Mr. Pegler
which blase
claims of miraculous powers were
made. It is a terrible thing, in
deed, thus to, impose on the hopes
of suffering victims, but they do
it, nevertheless, and there you
have another instance of man's
inhumanity to man. Some people
think a raw egg in a cup of Wor-
cestershire sauce gives relief, but
they are just crazy, because the
net result is a cold, clammy mois-
ture on the forehead. Others have
a wan faith in canned tomatoes,
but they don't do any good,
either. Finally, there is the hair
of the dog that bit you, but that
only deadens the pain and post-
pones the suffering, because even-
tually that alcohol, too; must be
eliminated from the brain.
The only cure for hangover is
suffering, and this may be mild
or awful, brief_or prolonged, ac-
cording to the amount of alcohol
absorbed. For some curious rea.
son which science has not dis-
covered, certain beverages and
combinations of them produce dis-
tinctive types of hangover. Beer,
for example, causes a dull, tena-
clous misery, but beer and cham-
pagne result in sharp, uncontroll-
able twitches and a sense of de-
tachment from one's body.
CHAMPAGNE, in excess, gives
U the subject a feeling that his
scalp is flopping around like an
old cap several sizes too large,
and the brandy victim sometimes
has an alarming sense that he has
died and musn't move the body
until the coroner has been there.
He doesn’t actually think that, be-
cause his intelligence remains
acute, but he feels that way, just
the same. It is kind of hard to
- explain.
All types of hangover are ac-
companied by a numbness of the
fingertips and toes and by remorse
and a firm determination never
- Angel’s have been working over-
1 L time.
On a mere bit of humanity,
Here is the finished product,
They sent it down to me.
| 1. your editorial on the Barnes
j controversy. I’d been looking for 1 One chipped a piece of gold,
you to speak up, and I should ! From off the golden stair,
| have been terribly disappointed Placed it on this very head,
had you not. And finished it with care,
tion against our old system of - it is most amusing to note
government. The politicians that | 4-__,
are too dumb to understand will |
be relegated to the scrap-pile |
with chiselers that respect no
law but force.
When the corporation lobby
ist, the spies ami the underworld
racketeers have been removed
. to drink alcoholic beverages again.
These manifestations abate grad-
ually as the alcohol itself disap-
pears from the brain tissue, and
upon complete recovery, the sub-
ject forgets not only his suffer-
. - ings but his excellent resolutions.
from the pay of the corpora-
18
*
This Is Life
BY JACK MAXWELL
TODAY’S filler: "The pain we
1 have to suffer seems so ,
One plucked from the sky above,
Two tiny pieces of blue.
And made those lovely eyes.
They're smiling now at you
The smile of a tiny angel.
Showing two teeth of pearl
and readily succumbs to tempta-
tion..
There is also a tendency to ex-
aggerate the importance of unbe- , 1
coming remarks and conduct of ' 1
the night before, and to compose,
mentally, as one lies abed the next
morning, letters and speeches of
1 apology to one's hostess for fool- ,
ish utterances and pranks which i 1
were not so bad as all that, but
tions, the cost to the consumer | broad set side by side with this
will .lx reduced almost half. | life’s narrow span, we need no
Those with a warped sense of | greater evidence that GOD has
justice might as well under- , some diviner destiny for man.
stand now that the days of giv- , HE would not deem it worth
ing the natural resources to a | IDS while to send such crush-
,—-----.---------------. ing sorrows as pursue us here,
unless beyond this fleeting jour-’
ney’s end ... our chastened
Books
I spirits found ANOTHER
SPHERE"
Such a helpless little mile.
For this big old world.
I'll try to repay with kindness and |
love,
The angel who worked overtime |
To send me this tiny hit of
Heaven.
This baby boy of mine
BESSIE LAIRE OZEE
Handley, Texas.
merely consistent with the occa-
sion. In other words, all who
were present the night before
feel the same way, and the best
procedure is just to forget It
0A mighty doggone high
YULETIDE BOOKS IMMORTALITY, sez 1.
WE frequently overlook the /
fact, but Christmas is pri-
marily a religious festival. And
when you are doing your Christ-
mas book shopping you might ■
like to know about two recent
publications which, because they
are beautifully gotten-up. re-
| ligious books, would make very
suitable Christmas gifts.
One of them is "The Bible in
‘Art" (Covici-Friede: $5), a gor-
geous collection of more than
IM reproductions of famous
Bible paintings, assembled and
edited by Clifton Harby.
The entire range of the
Scripture is covered in this col-
| lection, and' so is the entire
range of art, from the medieval
’ “primitives,” with their naive,
child like quality, to the robust
splendor of Raphael and Michel-
angelo, and the sophisticated
suavity of Burne-Jones
Twelve of the reproductions
are in full cover. All in all. it is
an exceedingly handsome book
The other one is "Christmas,”
the sixth in a series of Yuletide
books brought out annually.
Edited by R E. Haughan and
offered by the Augsburg Pub-
lishing House at onr-dottar, it
provides a nice assortment of
holiday fare
Do You Agree?
HIMERGENCIES and decisions in our
I individual and community and na-__
tional lives are the stuff out of which |
national character is made. Franklin
D. Roosevelt.
MY RIGHT HAND still carries
enough dynamite to knock some of
them
so-called professional boxers
it for lawn and park plantings. Botani-
cal name: Rhus virens. FamilySu- goofy. George Raft, film star and for-
mac. mer boxes.
In it are Christmas stories by
Christopher Morley Elsie Sing-
master, Henry Booth, and Grace
Livingston Hill: a number of
articles by such people as John
T Farts, Winifred Kirkland, and
Lawrence Stavig: reprints of the
— Christmas Gospels of Matthew
and Luke: color reproductions
of excellent paintings by Knuts
Heldner and Birger Sandzen and
a fine series of Christmas photo-
graphs from many lands
if your family observes the
rood old custom of reading a
Chrietmas story by the fireside
on Christmas Fve. you will find |
this book a first-rate invest-
ment.
bid for |
TODAY'S COMMON ERROR
And a . .
powerful, comforting thought ... Never say, "My father thought
when the way gets rough as all
kinds of HELL At least, it is
for ME. • W*
I should be punished and my moth-
SIDE GLANCES
“4 Me w*
HOWEVER, it will be seen that
I the state of being hung over,
painful- though it be, is accom-
panied by a brisk moral and in- e
tellectual stimulus. The charac-
ter is momentarily burnt clean of
sinful and frivolous trails, and the
mind perceives the wanton folly of I 1
every excess more clearly than at
any other time. If these elements
of the malady could be preserved
after the period of suffering has
passed, the patient would be much
better off, but a few days or weeks ■
er thought it was unnecessary;"
say, "but my mother thought, etc.”
-----------------— : pass, and, lo! it is the same old
By George Clark (I think that is the first time
_ I ever used the word "Lo!" And I
I | have never used "Alas!"
A The worst place to have a hang-
HeR cut over is in a jail, where there is
■ ‘ no human sympathy, and there is
likely to be a clamorous moaning
and babbling of other victims in a /
really bad way. They can't get
any coffee, they can't get sleep,
they can’t shave and, if it is Sat-
urday night when they are picked
up, they have to lie in the can
A,
- )
)
till Monday morning
‘ -Eut-ext to a jail, the worst- •
place for a hangover is on a j
train, and persons about to go
away should try to remember how
terrible it is to wake up in •
stuffy berth about 4 o'clock in the
morning and peer out the window 1
4—at the freight —house in High
Point. N C., or Cairo, III. It is
a long way to the water cooler in
| the end of the car, and you can t
bring back a drink and set it on
the windowsill in those damn little
i paper envelopes, because they
I don't have any bottom to sit on.
Ten minutes later you have to go
| and get another, and that means WirI
putting on your bathrobe and slip-
pers, and pretty soon they hitch
on the diner and the fumes of pork
sausage, eggs, bacon and German
fried potatoes begin—to seep------
T through.
I don't know why I am telling
you this. * %
“This la my.party, mother, and I won't stand for dad do-
ing all its old card tricks.".
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
Woe to him that buildeth a
town with blood, and stablisheth *
| city by iniquity Habakkuk 2:12.
• • •
He who sins against men may
fear discovery, but he who sins
against God is sure of it.—Jones.
Commie
pushed ■
$213,178 9
Chairman
ed € tenh
another p
WVorl h
additional
report lug
Hotel 1
raised
$312,505
The
ended
There w 1
tomorrows
members
Army to 1
ten in
p. m.
cards will
Worker
noon at 1
their next
final mee
noon: 1
Today’s
cial Gifts)
ploye Div
Sales Ar|
tional Fir
' 11
Late 1 1
script ions
Fort W
ployes $7
employes 1
additional
$104; Aril
ploye repo
cry A Su
$543; Coo
10 emplo
Structural
$98. 1
Souther!
ployes, $2
Carpet Co
Worth Na
ployes add
limgim Co
G.M.A.C.,
additional
Rock Istat
ployes, $4
incomplete
Motor 1.11
Lone Star
11016
TWC
Club
‘C
"Charm
Club prods
ed at the
at Texas
p. m. Wed
Bickers, h
partment '
prosentatic
Miss Eli
Worth will
John A. 1
Wells will
role. Othe
are Milton
Flaniken,
this, Ila
Greenwalt,
entine Gra
Bernard 1
Rentfro.
Letterme
and Mrs. 1
and Mrs. .1
of the T. V
■ the- Origins
Presiden
-are In HI
the Southe
versities
there this
they plan
D. C., an
brief visits
Seventy-
c made th
roll, compi
Rose Ellen
They are
Midlothian,
Worth and
ward of F
straight "A
Lenore Ale:
Jennie Vern
ton, Jamie
Flynt, Pe
Click, Clar
Griffith, G
garet Haye
Langston, T
Jane Moreh
ick, Lola R
Thomas, Ho
Whitworth,
+ Olive Blank
Mezalle Cle
and Louise
Also Mary
Davies. Dor
Robbie Ruth
Ralph McIn
Frona Pate
Archer Je
Black, Violi
gess, Helen
Irma Dale F
hara Hlarto
Doris Marsh
Anita Parc
Vanita Pare
Marion Ri'
Grace Thor
well. .Margu
Frances Ver
WILLIAM
SET F
Body Of O
Sent
Funeral s
(Dick) Will
who was kill
Waco yeste
—Harveson an
at 3:30 p. m.
will be sent
Ms Willis
survived by
dren, all of
traveling ma
Sinclair Oil
He was cl
w hich collide
and Mrs. Fra
Mr and Mrs
iously injured
1
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Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936, newspaper, December 3, 1936; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1672829/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.